Tag Archives: The Holy Arunachala

Saint Sri Guru Namasivaya – 3

29 Aug

Om Sathguru Sri Seshadri Swamigal Thiruvadikkae


Saint Sri Guru Namasivaya – 3

(Disciple of Saint Sri Guhai Namasvaya)

Part -3.

The Holy Arunachala – Chidambaram Temple.

The story begins, according to the Koyil Puranam, the sthala puranam of Chidambaram, in the forests of Tarakam. In that place there was a large multitude of rishis, all following the ritualistic practices of Mimamsa. Siva went there to confront them, accompanied by Vishnu disguised as a beautiful woman, and Adiseshan, the snake. Siva initially caused the rishis to have a violent quarrel among themselves, but later their anger was directed against Siva, whom they attempted to destroy by means of magical incantations. They created a fierce tiger out of a sacrificial fire and made it attack Siva. Unperturbed and still smiling, he caught hold of it and with the nail of his little finger he stripped off its skin and wrapped it around himself like a silk cloth. Undiscouraged by this failure, the sages renewed their offerings and produced an enormous serpent that Siva seized and wrapped round his neck like a garland. Then he began to dance. However, the rishis had not exhausted their tricks. They created a malignant dwarf, Muyalakan, who rushed towards Siva with the intention of attacking him. Siva touched him with the tip of his foot and fractured his spine, leaving him writhing on the ground. Siva then resumed his dance, which was witnessed or accompanied by several of the gods and the rishis. A typical description of the dance scene can be found in Patanjali Charita, 4, 61-7:

At the very sign of his [Siva’s] brow, Vishnu takes up the drum mardala which, with its noble rumbling note, starts the musical sound. With his lotus hands, Brahma takes up a pair of cymbals, Indra plays the bamboo flute, while Saraswati plays the lute. Siva ties up his hair with the snake, wraps the elephant hide around his waist and begins to dance.

The myths and legends of Chidambaram state that Siva was compelled to continue his dance at Chidambaram, rather than in the Tarakam forest, because he could see that the original site could not sustain the powerful energies of the dance. Invoking a yogic parallel, he identified the snaking ida and pingala currents in the subtle body with geographical locations north and south of Chidambaram, and then said that the central channel [natuvinadi] passed directly through Tillai, making it the centre of the world and the site of the original cosmic lingam.

It is through this analogy that Chidambaram, according to local tradition, became the centre of the cosmos, the axis mundi around which all the rest of the universe rotates. The dance is so powerful, only the true centre, the heart of the spiritual and material universe, can support and sustain it. According to this tradition, Chidambaram becomes the world centre on the physical plane; on the spiritual plane, the central shrine becomes the Heart-lotus, the still centre out of which emerges the primal dance of creation in the form of Siva’s dance of bliss.

The Suta Samhita (8, 9, 47) declares that the dance is beyond the vision of even the greatest of sages and adds that only Siva’s consort is naturally able to witness the dancing movements of the Lord. Elsewhere the Suta Samhita (3, 4, 6) states:

Devi in her great mercy witnesses what is impossible for others to see. Like the mother who partakes of the medicine that the baby cannot directly taste, though through the mother would benefit by it, she gazes and passes on the benefit of the vision to the children, her devotees.

How then did the sages and gods get to see the dance? In the Tarakam forest it was Siva himself who graciously granted divine sight to the assembled gods and rishis so that they could watch him dance. Without that grace, even they would not have been able to see him.

In addition to Devi, known as Sivakami in Chidambaram, there are two sages who have been granted the boon of being able to witness Lord Nataraja’s dance: Patanjali, who is the incarnation of the cosmic serpent Adiseshan, and Vyaghrapada, the father of the boy Upamanyu for whom Siva created the ocean of milk. Patanjali and Vyaghrapada were worshipping the original lingam at Chidambaram with such devotion that Siva appeared before them and said that he would grant them a boon. They both asked to be eternal witnesses to his dance of bliss at Chidambaram, a request that Siva granted.

For devotees of ‘Koyil‘, Chidambaram signifies both the physical centre of the world and its spiritual Heart-lotus, that space of consciousness in which physical creation appears, and the place where the surrendered mind has to subside and die in order to get a true knowledge of Siva. The Heart is the place out of which creation manifests, and it is also the place where enlightenment takes place. The Heart-dance expresses itself phenomenally as the world and the power that sustains it, but it must be remembered that the place of its origin is the centre into which the jiva must withdraw in order to transcend creation and attain enlightenment. In an explanation of the significance of Lord Nataraja’s dance, the Tamil work Tiru-Arul-Payan (IX, 3) identifies these two aspects and makes the following recommendations:

On each day that Guru Namasivaya travelled towards Chidambaram, the Heart, he called out to a local form of Sakti and begged for food. The rice he received was the grace of the Lord, mediated through his consort. And each time he was the recipient of such grace, he was purified to the extent that he was able to move nearer and nearer to Chidambaram, the space of consciousness.

In Saivism, Sakti brings maya into existence while simultaneously providing the grace through which one can transcend it. As verse thirty-six of Unmai Vilakkam notes, the energy of the dance scatters the darkness of maya, burns up karma, stamps out the soul’s impurities, showers grace, and finally plunges the soul into the ocean of bliss.

When Guru Namasivaya, at the threshold of the sanctum, bathed in the Siva Ganga Tank, he was immersing his soul in this ocean of bliss. As he commented at the time, those who have been fortunate enough to have this bath ‘will see the effects of all their deeds destroyed [and] will be plundered of all their action’s evil fruit’.

The grace of Sakti brought him, step by step, to the threshold of the Heart; the bath in the sacred ocean of bliss eradicated his karmas, enabling him to move on and encounter the Lord in the Heart-lotus, the inner sanctum of the temple. But there, much to his surprise, he found not Siva but his own Guru, Guhai Namasivaya, thus confirming the ancient truth that God and the Guru are one and that at the moment of enlightenment they can both be found in the Heart.

There is a mystical and mysterious paradox at the heart of Saiva cosmology. Though the inherent power of Siva enables Sakti to arise within himself and perform all the panchakrityas, Siva himself does nothing. He is eternal silence, stillness and peace, untouched and unaffected by the activities that Sakti performs through his power and on his behalf. When one reaches the Heart, the source of creation, and directly experiences the dance of bliss there, one finds that it is a motionless dance of silence, not a frenetic physical act of movement and physical creation. There, as Ramana Maharshi says, Siva ‘dances the dance of stillness in the dancing hall of the Heart’.

Guru Namasivaya’s story can be read on two equally valid levels: the miracle-laden physical and the spiritually symbolic.  Guru Namasivaya was singing a song to Siva, asking him to perform the dance of bliss for all the assembled priests and devotees. Though, ostensibly, he is asking for a physical manifestation, he is also calling on Siva to reveal himself in their hearts. Having, through grace, established himself in the Heart, Guru Namasivaya now has the power and the authority to grant a glimpse of that sublime state to the people assembled in the temple. But, when that glimpse is granted to them, they are paralysed with awe and fear. This is a common reaction in impure souls who are pushed too near the divinity.

Guru Namasivaya was addressing to Lord Nataraja, asking him to perform his dance:

Supreme Godhead! Divine Lord of Chidambaram!

You who perform your divine dance in Tillai’s Hall

as the multitude sing hymns of praise and adoration,

and Tumburu and Narada intone a heavenly melody,

as Vishnu slings a drum upon his hip

and raps out a thunderous rhythm,

and Gauri, Lady Ambika herself,

strikes her bright celestial cymbals

to mark the time in even measure!

Will the day ever come

When my eyes will rejoice to see

that pounding golden foot,

that upraised lotus foot,

that delicate waist and navel’s whorl,

that breast, white with smeared ash,

draped with a fierce tiger’s noble pelt,

those four-fold golden arms

each as great as Meru’s mount,

that blackened throat, that face, that holy head?

When Guru Namasivaya praised him in this way, Lord Nataraja started dancing. Everyone present fell down, overcome by awe, prostrated, and remained motionless, face down.

After a long time had passed, three of the three thousand priests raised their heads and said, ‘The dance has been going on for a long time. Guru Namasivaya, you who are orchestrating the dance, and you, Lord of Tillai, who dance without, in reality, moving at all – your greatness cannot be perceived unless you stop the dance!’

Guru Namasivaya replied, enigmatically, ‘Am, I the one who is asking for the dance? Am I the one who is asking for it to stop?’

‘The one who is keeping time,’ they all said, ‘is the one who should stop first.’

Guru Namasivaya had been beating out the rhythm of the dance. He ignored their request and went on singing to the dancing Nataraja:

Holy dancer of Tillai’s Hall! Our creator and daily benefactor!

Would there by any pain in your upraised foot

and would that other foot ever falter

which pounds upon the demon

Muyalakan if your dance went on and on for all eternity?

Muyalakan is the malignant dwarf who was created by the rishis to attack Siva in the Tarakam forest. Siva broke his back with his toe. In all iconographical representations of the ananda tandava Muyalakan is depicted under Nataraja’s right foot. The dwarf symbolises ignorance, so when Nataraja repeatedly stamps on his body during the dance, he is eradicating the ignorance that separates one from God. Muyalakan is a Tamil name. In Sanskrit the dwarf is known as Apasmara, which means ‘an epileptic’. Ignorance, in an epileptic fit of madness, tries to assail God, but is immediately broken and destroyed.

In response to this new verse, the dancing became even more frenzied. The three thousand priests, still wanting the awesome dance to stop, tried a different approach.

‘Guru Namasivaya is singing the praises of Siva,’ they said, ‘and Siva is obeying him. Let us sing in praise of Guru Namasivaya and see if he will accept our request to stop the dance.’

Countless thousands of verses he has sung

in the presence of Tillai’s Lord,

who delights in the pleasures of the hunt,

and who sports eternally with his consort Kali

as Kama’s body wastes and withers away.

It was on hearing that holy song of Guru Namasivaya

that the Lord was deeply pleased

and raised his anklet foot to dance.

The change of tactics worked. Guru Namasivaya responded by composing a new verse that requested Siva to stop his dance:

My Lord, you who dance in the Golden Hall,

Your glorious foot and anklet are decorous indeed

As they dance to the rhythm tat-taa-taata-ti.

May you now heed my song and cease your holy dance.

The dance stopped as the verse was completed. The priests were so impressed by Guru Namasivaya’s ability to command God himself to dance, they vowed to each other that after his death they would worship the lingam over his samadhi as if it were Siva himself. During his subsequent stay in Chidambaram Guru Namasivaya composed hundreds of verses, many of which have survived. One of his biographers, writing about this period, noted: ‘No poem did he write but it sang the praises of his Guru, and no lesser deity filled his thoughts, only Lord Siva himself.’

This is certainly true of his most famous poem, Annamalai Venba, which extols Siva in the form of Arunachala and repeatedly praises the greatness of his Guru, whom he considered to be Arunachala-Siva in human form. Going through the verses, one can easily visualise him sitting in Chidambaram, dutifully carrying out his Guru’s orders, but secretly dreaming of Arunachala-Siva, Guhai Namasivaya, his Guru, and the blessed period of his life when he had the constant company of both. A selection of verses from Annamalai Venba appears elsewhere on this site. Even the most casual perusal of this poem will give an indication of the reverence, the esteem and the devotion that the author felt for the sacred mountain and for its human manifestation, Guhai Namasivaya.

The story of Guru Namasivaya’s life ends rather abruptly here, for there is no further record of his activities, or even an account of his passing away. The text that is the source of most of the material in this chapter merely says that after performing many more holy works, Guru Namasivaya finally passed away at Tirupperundurai, a town associated with Manikkavachagar. However, to contradict this, there is a stone inscription in Chidambaram, apparently executed shortly after Guru Namasivaya’s death, which says that ‘Namasivaya became one with the Siva lingam upon the mountain Arunagiri’. After this inscription there are three words, vanta guru tanam, whose meaning, in the context, is a little obscure. However, they can be taken to mean that Arunachala himself took the form of Guru Namasivaya and came to Chidambaram to execute his work there.

A devotee, Chinna Nalla Nayan, donated the stone and had the epitaph carved. He concluded his inscription with the following words:

We joyfully offer our worship to him who dwells in the city of the tiger [Chidambaram] in a hall of burnished gold, where Guru Namasivaya, disciple of the godly Guhai Namasivaya, who dwells on the slopes of Arunachala, dedicated himself to the service of the Lord. Praise be to the Lord!